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. 2007 Apr;26(4):459-65.
doi: 10.1007/s00299-006-0257-8. Epub 2006 Nov 14.

Engineering resistance to PVY in different potato cultivars in a marker-free transformation system using a 'shooter mutant' A. tumefaciens

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Engineering resistance to PVY in different potato cultivars in a marker-free transformation system using a 'shooter mutant' A. tumefaciens

Agnes Bukovinszki et al. Plant Cell Rep. 2007 Apr.

Abstract

In this work, Potato virus Y (PVY) resistant potatoes were generated using an environmentally safe construct. For this purpose, a 'shooter' mutant Agrobacterium-based transformation system was used. The isopentenyl transferase gene (ipt) present on the Ti plasmid of 'shooter' strains enhances shoot regeneration and can be used as a phenotypic selection marker. The introduced marker-free binary vector carried a hairpin construct derived from the coat protein gene of PVY-NTN strain in order to induce gene silencing. Transformation resulted in high regeneration rates (1.4-5.7 shoots per explant). With pre-selection for the ipt (+) phenotype the transformation frequency was 24-53%, while without selection 12-28% of the shoots were PCR positive. The presence of the transgene was verified by Southern hybridization. In 16 of 31 challenged transformant lines PVY could be detected neither by RT-PCR nor by back inoculation. A 62.5% of these resistant lines proved to be also ipt-free. This transformation system was reproducible in four potato cultivars, suggesting that it could easily be adapted for other species.

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